Emphatic Victory for Ireland at Lansdowne Road

23 March 2002 09:50

23/03/02.A red letter day for John Kelly who scored two tries and was named LLoyds TSB Man of the Match in Ireland's 32-17 victory over Italy at Lansdowne Road

It was certainly no classic game of rugby, both sides guilty of error but there was no denying that Ireland deserved their win. It was a tremdous display for new cap John Kelly who took his brace of tries well, the first when he came off his own wing to score on the left. Afterwards a clearly delighted John Kelly said, "Obviously I'm thrilled, couldn't have asked for a better start. But the tries were a result of good teamwork, Ronan's pass was superb took everyone out, just a question of holding on for it."

Ireland were first to score when David Humphreys tapped over a simple 30 metre penalty in the 4th minute and he followed with successful efforts in the 10th and 16th minutes to leave Ireland 9 points to the good. By then Ireland had created several try scoring chances the best of which came in the 13th minute when Brian O'Driscoll failed to get a pass away to Anthony Foley who had the line at his mercy.

The Italians were then reduced to fourteen when prop Salvatore Perugini was yellow carded for a head butt on Peter Stringer. How a red card wasn't produced is a mystery.

Ireland continued to enjoy the greater amount of possession but coughed up the ball on countless occasion.

They were probably fortunate that the Italians dropped ball at crucial times but there was nothing fortunate about Ireland's first try which came when Kelly galloped through following a neat cut-out pass from temporary replacement Ronan O'Gara. O'Gara added the points and the Italians had a second player yellow carded when their other prop Giampiero de Carli received his marching orders for punching.

The half ended with a penalty from O'Gara and a penalty miss from the normally reliable Diego Dominguez.

Early in the second half Italian full-back Gert Peens dropped a marvellous goal from inside his own half but in the 47th minute Kelly scored his second try after taking a beautifully deft inside pass from Peter Clohessy. Humphreys missed the difficult conversion and Italy's most impressive player, flanker Mauro Bergamasco scored to the right of the posts for a try that Dominguez converted. (24-10).

Humphreys added a penalty which heralded a period of Italian pressure but the Irish defence held firm, helped somewhat by the Italian's lack of nous.

Denis Hickie scored a try before being replaced by Tyrone Howe but it was the Italians who had the final say, de Carli scoring deep in injury time, Dominguez adding the conversion.

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